Team:York/Project
From 2014.igem.org
The project
Why we care about cadmium and sulfate in the environment:
Both cadmium and sulfate can be found in wastewater and is produced from processes such as electroplating. If these contaminants are not removed from the environment, they can have a detrimental impact upon living organisms. For example, if cadmium is consumed by mammals over a long period of time, it can cause health problems such as Itai-Itai disease (cadmium poisoning). This year, our project at iGEM York is focusing on increasing the uptake of cadmium and sulfate in our chosen chassis E. coli. The project has two main, interlinked approaches:
Firstly, the increased uptake of sulfur using an exogenous sulfate transporter from Bacillus.
Secondly the increased uptake and chelation of cadmium ions through the use of metal-binding proteins, to produce a potentially recoverable metal product.
How are these two processes intertwined?
We are tweaking the cysteine biosynthesis pathway, allowing the over-expression of cysteine and the utilisation of the sulfate our cell takes up. In addition, we are tweaking another system, the production of phytochelatins. The phytochelatins we want to over-produce are rich in cysteine and thus, will use the cysteine that will accumulate inside the cell. These phytochelatins can then chelate the cadmium that accumulates and thus, will act as a sink for cadmium also.
How is our system regulated?
We have designed our system to be regulated by the concentration of cadmium in the environment. If the concentration of cadmium surpasses the sensitivity threshold of pYoda (cadmium-inducible promoter)then it will activate our system and as a result, our genes will be expressed. Our system prevents the overproduction of cysteine when cadmium is at low concentrations